Top Moments From the 2018 Boston Marathon
Brutal weather created chaos in the elite field, leading to inspiring finishes and new faces on the podium.
From the weather to the winners to the surprise runners making the podium, the 2018 Boston Marathon was one for the ages. And the biggest moment was that Shoes & Gear, Cutoff Time for 2025 Boston Marathon Is 6:51.
The driving rain and cold temperatures of the day played a factor in both men’s and women’s elite races. Here’s a summary of how they played out.
Pro Women
Desiree Linden, a two-time Olympian, won her first major marathon title in 2:39:54. It was Linden’s sixth time competing in Boston, and her knowledge of the course and trademark no-nonsense grit finally paid off.
“It seemed so not my year,” Linden said after the race. “I just expected it was a thing where it was going to be a rebuilding [race]. I know I have a lifetime of mileage. When you’re not consistent, that’s the thing that kind of sits on your mind. You didn’t do the work. Even though I’ve been doing it forever, it just felt like in the present, you didn’t do the work. You’re not going to win, you don’t deserve to win, you didn’t show up every day. ”
Sarah Sellers, 26, of Arizona was a surprise second in 2:44:05. Krista Duchene, 41 and a mother of three, was third in 2:44:20.
Pro Men
The men’s race saw another surprise winner in Yuki Kawauchi, a frequent marathoner from Japan who finally scored a major marathon victory. He won in 2:15:54. American Shadrack Biwott finished third in 2:18:35 behind former winner Geoffrey Kirui.
“I think there is probably not a single person in Boston who thought I would win this today,” Kawauchi said through a translator following the race.
The Weather
The conditions caused the slowest winning times in both the men’s and women’s field in more than 30 years. To cope, elites donned jackets, Galen Rupp wore a mask, and NAZ elite runner Kellyn Taylor was forced to drop out at the 20K mark because of hypothermia symptoms.
Charity Runners
In other important moments from the 2018 race, runners who did the full 26.2 miles for charity pulled in some large dollar amounts. Charity runners raised $36.6 million, which was a 7 percent jump from 2017. It wasn’t the most money ever raised (that would be in 2014, a year after the Boston bombings), but more than 100 charities benefitted from the charity field. (Interested in running Boston one year? Here’s how you get in.)
The Worst Weather Days in Boston Marathon History.
Kit has been a health, fitness, and running journalist for the past five years. His work has taken him across the country, from Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, to cover the 2016 Olympic Trials to the top of Mt. Katahdin in Maine to cover Scott Jurek’s for the first time in 33 years in 2015.
Watch Next
Director of Special Projects
Linden, 34, charged through the finish line in 2:39:54 to win the 2018 Boston Marathon
Roughly an hour into the race
Training Tweaks That Will Get You to a BQ